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  • Wills et al. - 2020 poly_preprint

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A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning

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A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning. / Wills, A.J.; Ellet, Lyn; Milton, Fraser et al.
In: Learning and Behavior, Vol. 48, 13.03.2020, p. 66-83.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Wills, AJ, Ellet, L, Milton, F, Croft, G & Beesley, T 2020, 'A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning', Learning and Behavior, vol. 48, pp. 66-83. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

APA

Wills, A. J., Ellet, L., Milton, F., Croft, G., & Beesley, T. (2020). A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning. Learning and Behavior, 48, 66-83. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

Vancouver

Wills AJ, Ellet L, Milton F, Croft G, Beesley T. A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning. Learning and Behavior. 2020 Mar 13;48:66-83. doi: 10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

Author

Wills, A.J. ; Ellet, Lyn ; Milton, Fraser et al. / A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning. In: Learning and Behavior. 2020 ; Vol. 48. pp. 66-83.

Bibtex

@article{e52fc3bd6de04db3b63e4c28885be4bc,
title = "A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning",
abstract = "Polymorphous concepts are hard to learn, and this is perhaps surprising because they, like many natural concepts, have an overall similarity structure. However, the dimensional summation hypothesis (Milton and Wills Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 30, 407–415 2004) predicts this difficulty. It also makes a number of other predictions about polymorphous concept formation, which are tested here. In Experiment 4, we confirm the theory{\textquoteright}s prediction that polymorphous concept formation should be facilitated by deterministic pretraining on the constituent features of the stimulus. This facilitation is relative to an equivalent amount of training on the polymorphous concept itself. In further experiments, we compare the predictions of the dimensional summation hypothesis with a more general strategic account (Experiment 2), a seriality of training account (Experiment 3), a stimulus decomposition account (also Experiment 3), and an error-based account (Experiment 4). The dimensional summation hypothesis provides the best account of these data. In Experiment 5, a further prediction is confirmed—the single feature pretraining effect is eliminated by a concurrent counting task. The current experiments suggest the hypothesis that natural concepts might be acquired by the deliberate serial summation of evidence. This idea has testable implications for classroom learning.",
author = "A.J. Wills and Lyn Ellet and Fraser Milton and Gareth Croft and Tom Beesley",
note = "The final publication is available at Springer via https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6",
year = "2020",
month = mar,
day = "13",
doi = "10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6",
language = "English",
volume = "48",
pages = "66--83",
journal = "Learning and Behavior",
issn = "1543-4508",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A dimensional summation account of polymorphous category learning

AU - Wills, A.J.

AU - Ellet, Lyn

AU - Milton, Fraser

AU - Croft, Gareth

AU - Beesley, Tom

N1 - The final publication is available at Springer via https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

PY - 2020/3/13

Y1 - 2020/3/13

N2 - Polymorphous concepts are hard to learn, and this is perhaps surprising because they, like many natural concepts, have an overall similarity structure. However, the dimensional summation hypothesis (Milton and Wills Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 30, 407–415 2004) predicts this difficulty. It also makes a number of other predictions about polymorphous concept formation, which are tested here. In Experiment 4, we confirm the theory’s prediction that polymorphous concept formation should be facilitated by deterministic pretraining on the constituent features of the stimulus. This facilitation is relative to an equivalent amount of training on the polymorphous concept itself. In further experiments, we compare the predictions of the dimensional summation hypothesis with a more general strategic account (Experiment 2), a seriality of training account (Experiment 3), a stimulus decomposition account (also Experiment 3), and an error-based account (Experiment 4). The dimensional summation hypothesis provides the best account of these data. In Experiment 5, a further prediction is confirmed—the single feature pretraining effect is eliminated by a concurrent counting task. The current experiments suggest the hypothesis that natural concepts might be acquired by the deliberate serial summation of evidence. This idea has testable implications for classroom learning.

AB - Polymorphous concepts are hard to learn, and this is perhaps surprising because they, like many natural concepts, have an overall similarity structure. However, the dimensional summation hypothesis (Milton and Wills Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 30, 407–415 2004) predicts this difficulty. It also makes a number of other predictions about polymorphous concept formation, which are tested here. In Experiment 4, we confirm the theory’s prediction that polymorphous concept formation should be facilitated by deterministic pretraining on the constituent features of the stimulus. This facilitation is relative to an equivalent amount of training on the polymorphous concept itself. In further experiments, we compare the predictions of the dimensional summation hypothesis with a more general strategic account (Experiment 2), a seriality of training account (Experiment 3), a stimulus decomposition account (also Experiment 3), and an error-based account (Experiment 4). The dimensional summation hypothesis provides the best account of these data. In Experiment 5, a further prediction is confirmed—the single feature pretraining effect is eliminated by a concurrent counting task. The current experiments suggest the hypothesis that natural concepts might be acquired by the deliberate serial summation of evidence. This idea has testable implications for classroom learning.

U2 - 10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

DO - 10.3758/s13420-020-00409-6

M3 - Journal article

VL - 48

SP - 66

EP - 83

JO - Learning and Behavior

JF - Learning and Behavior

SN - 1543-4508

ER -